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How to hack your Vagus Nerve: Exercises to drammatically reduce inflammation, anxiety and trauma with vagal stimulation Paperback – January 17, 2020
The vagus nerve is the most important nerve you probably didn’t know you had.
The vagus nerve is a long meandering bundle of motor and sensory fibers that links the brain stem to the heart, lungs, and gut. It also branches out to touch and interact with the liver, spleen, gallbladder, ureter, female fertility organs, neck, ears, tongue, and kidneys.
Dr Justin Hoffman, a Santa Rosa, California, licensed naturopathic medical physician, says:
“Without the vagus nerve, key functions that keep us alive would not be maintained.”
Nationally recognized sports nutritionist, strength, and conditioning coach Brandon Mentore elaborates:
“The vagus nerve is extremely critical to your overall health and is intimately tied in with multiple organs and systems of the body.”
Vagus nerve dysfunction can result in a whole host of problems including obesity, bradycardia (abnormally slow heartbeat), difficulty swallowing, gastrointestinal diseases, fainting, mood disorders, B12 deficiency, chronic inflammation, impaired cough, and seizures.
Meanwhile, the vagus nerve stimulation has been shown to improve conditions such as:
- Anxiety disorder
- Heart disease
- Tinnitus
- Obesity
- Alcohol addiction
- Migraines
- Alzheimer’s
- Leaky gut
- Bad blood circulation
- Mood disorder
- Cancer
Your social nervous system increases your ability to respond effectively when you feel keyed up with anxiety or shut-down with depression.
Your vagus nerve plays a key role in your overall wellbeing and performance.
Whether you are feeling anxiety or depression, you can use tools to engage your social nervous system to re-establish higher order nervous system functions.
Healing the nervous system can take time and requires patience. Put the polyvagal theory into action in you life to increase your sense of freedom in body and mind
This book provides all the tools you need to understand and heal your vagus nerve.
- Print length133 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateJanuary 17, 2020
- Dimensions5.25 x 0.3 x 8 inches
- ISBN-101661309801
- ISBN-13978-1661309800
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Product details
- Publisher : Independently published (January 17, 2020)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 133 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1661309801
- ISBN-13 : 978-1661309800
- Item Weight : 5.1 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.25 x 0.3 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,312,476 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,693 in Cognitive Neuroscience & Neuropsychology
- #7,169 in Neurology (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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- Reviewed in the United States on June 13, 2020Easy to understand
- Reviewed in the United States on July 12, 2020This author throws around technical medical words as if she's copying from a book and doesn't really know anything about the subject. "Lots of people suffer from a herniated that presses on the spinal cord." The important omission is a herniated DISK. She mentions "When responding to stress, nerves also cause tightening of the muscular walls of the blood by a process called vasoconstriction." Blood doesn't have a muscular wall. The blood VESSELS do.
Chapter 5 and beyond repeatedly talks about the Autonomous Nervous system. It is the AUTONOMIC nervous system. In chapter 8 and throughout, she refers to the Trapezium and SCM muscles. The trapezium is a BONE in the HAND. The 'trapezius' is the muscle she was referring to. She refers to 'works of a very popular therapist' and 'Extensive studies demonstrate...' but never names these people or references the studies specifically.
The misspellings and improper punctuation and sentence structure are horrifying. She doesn't credential herself so we have no idea what authority she has to write this book. She writes in detail about the pathways of the nerve and the foramen that it travels through, yada yada, with no specific reason to know this, especially for the at home lay person with no medical knowledge!!!! Who all knows what a foramen is? It is a hole in the bone that a nerve, artery or vein passes through. But her 'story' gives zero reason to mention this. This book has editing errors on every page. It is an embarrassment. It is hard to trust this information when the source is not at all professional.
I know a great deal about anatomy and physiology. I was looking for specific, newest information and direction on the vagus nerve. What I got was a first draft of a book report written by someone who doesn't seem to know the subject, but got her hands on someone else's notes.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 10, 2020The vagus nerve is proving to hold a lot of features key to physical and mental health - the idea of it on the surface seems like another pseudoscience scam, but so did the idea of gut bacteria affecting brain chemistry, red light aiding in physical recovery, and so on. There is real potential that we have yet to fully understand, but could already begin to take advantage of.
All of that is to say it is a damn shame this book is floating out there because it offers no concrete, reliable, evidence based information on a subject that should be interesting and worthwhile. In fact, I personally could have read a textbook on the subject, regurgitated it back into a poorly written book, published it myself and taken advantage of peoples' good faith. I could've done that easily. But I am not a fraud. I am not Angelina Power.
Hey Amazon, how bout we get our money back?
- Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2020I really wanted to love this book. It has some good information which can be found elsewhere, but I found the typos and the layout of the material distracting. Important ideas and premise but the book needed another round of editing and organization.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2020This book is terribly written. The sentence structure makes absolutely no sense and the grammar is cringeworthy. The author seems to have attempted to paraphrase whatever Wikipedia said about the Vagus nerve. If you are interested in medicine and science, I would leave this book behind. I can’t believe all the reviews are so positive, I was shocked that this book made it to shelves. It clearly lacked an editor because neither the grammar nor the verbiage is understandable. This book also lacks any medical endorsement or validity whatsoever.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2020This book is actually quite stunning to peruse, which is extremely enlightening about the Vagus Nerve. It's probably the best book for me. I am exceptionally dazzled with this book since I know such a significant number of new things from this book. On the off chance that you are prepared to find the single nerve that can open your body's regular self-mending capacities and assist you with disposing of physical and psychological well-being issues and change your life, at that point this is the ideal book for you. I would propose this book to anybody.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2020From a sentence that tells us the vagus nerve is the 10th cranial nerve to the next sentence that tells us the vagus nerve is cranial nerve 10 until there is an entire paragraph on the vagus nerve being the 10th cranial nerve. This book sounds like a book report by a student who didn’t do the reading assignment.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 9, 2020This was a complete waste of money! There are no illustrations or diagrams to make the exercises clear! It is full of technical terminology for anatomy, so I'm completely lost and have no idea if Im even doing this stuff right. It reads like it was translated (badly) from another language and it is riddled with errors and sentence structure problems. Also, it seems plagiarized from another book on the subject that I read earlier.